The honorees will be formally inducted into the Athletics Hall
of Honor at a banquet on Friday, Oct. 8. They will be introduced to
Wittenberg's loyal fans during halftime of the annual Homecoming
football game against Hiram the next day, which is set to kick off
at 1 p.m. at Edwards-Maurer Field.

Staci Bertelli Radtke

Bertelli Radtke is one of the most decorated swimmers in
Wittenberg history, with a total of eight All-America honors during
her collegiate career. Six of her national finishes were good for
honorable mention All-America awards, given to competitors who
finish between ninth and 16th in an event at the NCAA Division III
Championships. In addition, she earned a pair of All-America
designations with a fifth-place finish in the 200-yard butterfly in
1995 and a seventh-place finish in the 1,650-yard freestyle in 1997
to go along with four All-North Coast Athletic Conference (NCAC)
finishes between her sophomore and seniors seasons. She concluded
her career with school records in three individual events, the
200-yard freestyle, the 200-yard butterfly and the 500-yard
freestyle. A native of Lexington, Ky., Bertelli Radtke earned her
bachelor's degree in Russian Area Studies. She currently resides in
Greenwich, Conn., with her husband, Lorin, and their three
children, Anabel, Jackson and Beau.

Bill Bibbee

Bibbee earned four varsity letters as a standout defensive
tackle between 1967-70. During that time, the Tigers posted a
sparkling 33-4 overall record, including a pair of undefeated
seasons in 1969 and 1970. Wittenberg was crowned national champions
after winning the Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) championship in
1969. The following year, Bibbee earned first-team all-conference
and a pair of All-America honors (first-team Lutheran Brotherhood
and second-team Associated Press) as he helped the Tigers to a 9-0
record. A graduate of nearby Springfield North High School and a
member of his alma mater’s athletics hall of fame, Bibbee
also earned one letter in wrestling and four more in track and
field at Wittenberg as an all-conference thrower. He recorded a
whopping 54 first-place finishes in the discus, shot put and hammer
events, including three individual OAC titles, and he led the team
in points scored in 1970 and 1971. After earning his
bachelor’s degree from Wittenberg in art, Bibbee remained in
Springfield, first working as a sheriff’s deputy and then
working in the family business, Brockman Furnace, where he
continues to work as a supervisor.

Glenn Hendrix

Hendrix is one of the finest running backs in the illustrious
history of Wittenberg football. While earning four varsity letters
between 1971-74, Hendrix carried a heavy load, earning first-team
All-OAC honors following his junior and senior seasons and earning
the Mike Gregory Award as the conference's Offensive MVP in 1974.
In addition, Hendrix was named team MVP in 1974, while also earning
Lutheran All-America honors in 1973 and 1974. He is one of just 11
players in program history to top 2,000 rushing yards after leading
the Tigers to a four-year record of 29-9-2, most notably including
a run to the 1973 national championship after a win in the
first-ever Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl. A native of Cleveland, Ohio,
Hendrix, a Certified Public Accountant and the director of
accounting for the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority,
currently resides in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, with his wife,
Shannon. He has three children, Aaron, Alexandria and Kimberley,
and four grandchildren.

Larry Peacock

Peacock, who passed away in 1994, was a feared linebacker who
served as a team captain and earned All-Ohio Athletic Conference
and team MVP honors as a senior while helping the Tigers to a
national championship in 1969. The Tigers posted a four-year record
of 32-5 and won two OAC championships during Peacock's gridiron
career. Amazingly, Peacock may have made an even greater impact on
the men's lacrosse team, which he helped to create in 1967. As a
senior, he captained the team and earned All-Midwest honors in
1970, capping a career in which he scored 22 goals. A native of
Copley, Ohio, a founding member of Wittenberg's Concerned Black
Students organization, and the cross-bearer during Wittenberg's
memorial service for Martin Luther King in 1968, Peacock graduated
from Wittenberg in 1970 with a degree in history. He is survived by
his wife, Margaret Hemphill '70, and his three children.

Anthony Robinson

Robinson became a starter seven games into his freshman year,
and by end of the 1992 season he had become the engine that would
eventually drive the Tiger men's basketball team to the brink of a
national championship two years later. By the time he finished his
collegiate career in 1996, Robinson had led Wittenberg in assists
four straight years and the NCAC three straight years. He continues
to own school records for assists in a game (15), season (173) and
career (618) after helping the Tigers to a four-year record of
96-22 record that included three NCAC regular season titles, one
NCAC Tournament crown and a third-place finish in the 1994 NCAA
Division III Tournament. Just as impressively, Robinson holds
school records for steals in a game (8), season (60) and career
(200). He earned a trio of All-NCAC designations during his career
before earning his bachelor's degree in business management from
Wittenberg. A native of Fairborn, Ohio, Robinson currently resides
in West Chester, Ohio, with his wife, Rhonda Mathews Robinson '95,
and their two sons, Preston and Parker.